Ecological aspects of nitrogen metabolism in plants

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Ecological aspects of nitrogen metabolism in plants

editors, Joe C. Polacco, Christopher D. Todd

Wiley-Blackwell, 2011

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Summary: "Ecological Aspects of Nitrogen Acquisition explores not only how plants compete for nitrogen in complex ecological communities The book also looks in greater detail at the associations plants recruit with other organisms, ranging from soil microbes to arthropods, as nitrogen acquisition strategies, and how these contribute to individual and evolutionary fitness. The book is divided into four sections, each addressing an important set of relationships of plants with the environment and how this impacts the plant's ability to compete successfully for nitrogen, often the most growth-limiting nutrient. Ecological Aspects of Nitrogen Acquisition provides thorough coverage of this important topic, and will be a vitally important resource for plant scientists, agronomists, and ecologists"-- Provided by publisher

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Ecological Aspects of Nitrogen Acquisition covers how plants compete for nitrogen in complex ecological communities and the associations plants recruit with other organisms, ranging from soil microbes to arthropods. The book is divided into four sections, each addressing an important set of relationships of plants with the environment and how this impacts the plant's ability to compete successfully for nitrogen, often the most growth-limiting nutrient. Ecological Aspects of Nitrogen Acquisition provides thorough coverage of this important topic, and is a vitally important resource for plant scientists, agronomists, and ecologists.

Table of Contents

Contributors. Preface. Section 1 The Nitrogen Cycle. 1 The New Global Nitrogen Cycle (Jan Willem Erisman). Section 2 Plant-Soil Microbe Interactions. 2 Plant Associations with Mycorrhizae and Rhizobium-Evolutionary Origins and Divergence of Strategies in Recruiting Soil Microbes (Gerben Bijl, Stephane De Mita, and Rene Geurts). 3 Arbuscular Mycorrhizas and N Acquisition by Plants (Luisa Lanfranco, Mike Guether, and Paola Bonfante). 4 Ectomycorrhiza and Nitrogen Provision to the Host Tree (Michel Chalot and Claude Plassard). 5 Proteins in the Rhizosphere: Another Example of Plant-Microbe Exchange (Clelia De-la-Pena and Jorge M. Vivanco). 6 Actinorhizal Symbioses (Katharina Pawlowski). 7 Two in the Far North: The Alder-Frankia Symbiosis, with an Alaskan Case Study (Mike Anderson). 8 The Path of Rhizobia: From a Free-Living Soil Bacterium to Root Nodulation (Pedro F. Mateos, Raul Rivas, Marta Robledo, Encarna Velazquez, Eustoquio Martinez-Molina, and David W. Emerich). 9 Exploiting Mycorrhizae and Rhizobium Symbioses to Recover Seriously Degraded Soils (Sergio Miana de Faria, Alexander S. Resende, Orivaldo J. Saggin Junior, and Robert M. Boddey). Section 3 Epi- and Endo-Phytic Microbes. 10 Nitrogen: Give and Take from Phylloplane Microbes (Mark A. Holland). 11 N2-Fixing Endophytes of Grasses and Cereals (Veronica Massena Reis, Jos Vanderleyden, and Stijn Spaepen). Section 4 Arthropods. 12 Effects of Insect Herbivores on the Nitrogen Economy of Plants (Leiling Tao and Mark D. Hunter). 13 Plant Defense Proteins That Inhibit Insect Peptidases (Carlos Peres Silva and Richard Ian Samuels). 14 Nutrient Acquisition and Concentration by Ant Symbionts: The Incidence and Importance of Biological Interactions to Plant Nutrition (Cynthia L. Sagers). Section 5 Environmental Signalling in N Acquisition. 15 The Functions of Flavonoids in Legume-Rhizobia Interactions (Oliver Yu and Yechun Wang). 16 Plant Hormones and Initiation of Legume Nodulation and Arbuscular Mycorrhization (Arijit Mukherjee and Jean-Michel Ane). 17 Nitric Oxide as a Signal Molecule in Intracellular and Extracellular Bacteria-plant Interactions (Andres Arruebarrena Di Palma, Lorenzo Lamattina, and Cecilia M. Creus). Index.

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